The anti-Monsanto ideation above fails to address the fact that other companies and even other nations that we might consider non-free also produce GMO seed. GMO crops would still exist - with all their admitted systemic peril - even if Monsanto was obliterated. It's blaming the messenger.
Tippit - your OPINION that Monsanto's non-propagation license is flawed or unenforceable is irrelevant. The legal mechanism is that Monsanto attempts to enforce and then the defendant can make a case to the court that contract is flawed. There is nothing wrong with anyone trying to enforce an explicit contract.
Your uninformed opinion about "business model" defies the 80 years of US plant patents which of course imply (non-)propagation licenses. Everything from roses, barley cultivars to fruit trees are patented, and have been for decades. Get a clue.
Another problem is that the long term safety of GMO food is questionable
Agreed - so how does hating Monsanto solve that problem ? Does hating Bayer, Novartis, Aventis, and AgrEvo improve the situation ? How about hating China's agriculture ministry with their Bt63 rice - is that helpful too ? Would things be better or substantially different if we waited a few years to allowed China and Korea to dominate GMO crop production ?
That train has already left the station and as far as I can tell there never was a realistic hope if could ever have been prevented. Telling China to not develop GMO rice is effectively telling a starving person not to eat. It isn't going to happen no matter how much you would prefer to wait for some perfect proof of safety. Yes the gene pool is polluted. What exactly did you think would happen once the less hirsute primates began tinkering with genes ?
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HansMustermann said:
One problem GM wheat, more specifically the Roundup-resistant kind, has caused already was propagating those genes to weeds.
There is
no evidence of that sort of gene flow. Instead roundup resistant weeds are developing/evolving in response to the heavy reliance on roundup/gylphosate.
HansMustermann said:
See, copying genes isn't actually invented by humans. There is a whole class of bacteria out there, the agrobacteria, which evolved a mechanism to copy genes from one plant to another.
WRONG ! Agrobacterium transfer their bacterial DNA
to plants - it's a one-way transfer. Now agrobacteria have been modified in lab to introduce selected "GMO" plasmids into plants, but that is nothing like the bogey man you are trying to invent.
I am not suggesting that horizontal gene transfer (very rare in higher plants) is not a huge looming problem associated with GMOs, but telling lies and crying wolf is not helpful.
What you don't hear about it is that it caused a slew of problems, often in countries which are already too poor to deal with them anyway. It's caused harmless insects to go nearly extinct, it's created invasions of insects it _doesn't_ kill to fill the niches freed, _and_ again the genes have spread in the wild so such ecological effects are now happening even in places where nobody farms corn anyway.
Evidence !
You can get GMO gene transfer to related wild crops by cross pollinization. There are no know cases of GMO plasmids horizontal transfer "in the field", despite your repeated claims to the contrary. Thanks for the alarmist woo; it's what I expect on this forum.
There was concern that Bt pollen might kill friendly insects at a distance, but this appears to not be the case in practice.
A lot of these concerns will likely be addressed in future GMO crops where one will be unable to re-propagate from offspring seed.